Government delivers on manifesto commitment to reduce red tape - merging existing bodies to get a grip on delays to infrastructure delivery.
- Infrastructure strategy and delivery brought together under one roof to support delivery of roads, railways, schools and hospitals, key to delivering on our Plan for Change to deliver the 1.5 million homes this country needs.
- Government also publishes the Teal book, the definitive guide for project delivery in government.
Roads, railways, schools and hospitals will be delivered more efficiently as this government "gets a grip" on vital infrastructure delays and goes further and faster to kickstart economic growth and improve the lives of working people across the country.
Bringing together two bodies into one, the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority (NISTA) will accelerate the delivery of major government projects - supporting delivery of our roads, railways, schools and hospitals - by overcoming barriers and providing expertise on private finance, alongside developing and implementing the 10-year infrastructure strategy.
NISTA - launching today - will look to fix the foundations of our infrastructure system by bringing strategy and delivery under one roof, addressing the systemic delivery challenges that have stunted growth for decades.
Transforming the way we plan for and deliver major projects is essential to the government's number one mission to grow the economy and is key to delivering on our Plan for Change to deliver the 1.5 million homes this country needs, making Britain a clean energy super-power and improving public services.
Over recent years uncertainty about infrastructure plans and policy and poor delivery has inhibited investment in programmes and supply chains, pushing up end costs for consumers.
Analysis from the Construction Leadership Council of 20,000 projects has found those with the best planning at the start of a project, had 20 per cent lower costs and were delivered up to 15 per cent faster.
The 2024 National Infrastructure Commission report on cost drivers of infrastructure projects in the UK found that a lack of a long-term strategic vision and plan for infrastructure was a root cause of higher costs. NISTA and the 10 Year Infrastructure Strategy will set the long-term plan needed to address many of these issues.
Alongside this, today the government has published the Teal book, the definitive guide for successful project delivery in government, which is set to transform how government projects are planned, managed, and delivered, benefitting hard-working people.
Darren Jones, Chief Secretary to the Treasury said:
NISTA will get a grip on the delays to infrastructure delivery that for too long have plagued our global reputation with investors. Today we are ushering in a new era for infrastructure delivery, restoring the confidence of businesses to invest and driving a decade of national renewal, powering growth across the country, and delivering on our Plan for Change.
Today's launch of NISTA is part of a three-pronged approach to addressing the fundamental constraints to infrastructure investment, sitting alongside the 10-year infrastructure strategy, which sets out a long-term plan for the country's infrastructure, and the new Planning and Infrastructure Bill to unblock planning constraints.
It follows last week's Spring Statement, where the OBR concluded that the government's landmark planning reforms will result in UK housebuilding reaching its highest level in over 40 years, bringing the UK one step closer to its Plan for Change mission to build 1.5 million homes.
The economy will be 0.2% larger in 2029-30 because of the reforms - worth around £6.8 billion in today's money - growing to 0.4% over the next ten years. This represents the biggest positive growth effect it has ever forecasted for a policy that comes at zero-cost to taxpayers. The reforms will secure over 170,000 new homes for hard working families and leave borrowing £3.4 billion lower in 2029-30.
In priority areas like the Oxford Cambridge Growth Corridor, NISTA will support a strategic approach to planning for infrastructure, growth and the environment, necessary to deliver the significant economic benefits that infrastructure investment can unlock.